On the Crossword Club Bulletin board, someone asked why I continued to belong to and support the Times Crossword Club despite all the accessibility and other problems. I gave a long answer, but the short one is: because of puzzles like this. There’s not a weak surface in all 30 clues, and there’s a good mixture of familiar and novel words without anything horribly obscure, with challenging wordplay that also avoids the obscure. One to go straight into the relevant book of Times puzzles when they get selected, and I’d say a good model for fair puzzles of average difficuly for competition use – this would be just right for a preliminary round at Cheltenham.
First answers in were 11 and 18, so it was a slowish start. Biggest miss for me: getting the idea of a three-letter month abbreviation at 10, but not seeing wine=GRAVES. There are some other popular wordplay wines like ASTI, HOCK and PORT, but it’s probably worth always considering GRAVES.
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | CHEQUE = “check” – a tricky one for North American solvers, whose cheques are already checks. |
| 4 | COTTAGEY – OTT (over the top)=exaggerated in CAGEY=suspicious |
| 10 | MARGRAVES – English form of the German word Markgraf. I picked this word up years ago when reading about Wagner and Bayreuth – in the town, there’s an old theatre called the Markgräfliches Opernhaus. As barred-grid solvers will know, there are various other -GRAVE nobles. Wordplay is MAR GRAVES=March Graves = “wine of the month” |
| 11 | AMAZE – ref. the fact that Hampton Court has A MAZE. Described most famously by Jerome K Jerome in Three Men in a Boat (back end of the chapter) |
| 12 | CHRISTMAS CHEER one of two I solved without understanding the full wordplay, having written down the wrong fodder for a full anag. (COLD HAM ETC SHERR) but still seen the right answer. It is of course I’S = one’s, in (C=cold, HAM ETC SHERR(y))* |
| 14 | PACER = rev. of (RE=on,CAP=top) |
| 16 | REPUDIATE = rev. of (ETA, I, DUPER) |
| 18 | ROAD TRAIN – a VERY big truck from Oz. ROA(m),DTARIN = (darn it)* |
| 20 | ROACH – alternate letters in aRrOgAnCe He |
| 21 | COUNTER ATTACKS – teller=counter (notes or votes), attacks=”a tax” |
| 25 | AFORE – old-fashioned ‘before’, best known from a whisky advertising slogan. Wordplay is A=a, FORE=warning (golf) |
| 26 | PAINTBALL = a war game for people on company outings – the modern-day equivalent of throwing wet sponges at the vicar at the summer fete. I in PANT=long,BALL=”bawl”=audible cry |
| 27 | MISQUOTE = QUO(ta) in TIMES*. Wordplay signals like “cut by 40%” are farily obvious once you’ve seen them a few times |
| 28 | STITCH – ref. running stich as well as the stitch you can get while running |
| Down | |
| 1 | COMIC OPERA – MI=note in CO,CO then A REP rev., rep. being a repertory company. |
| 3 | UPRISER – PRISE in UR – an odd-looking answer word, but it is in Collins |
| 5 | OASIS = “O, a Sis” is the appeal to a family member |
| 6 | TRASHED = threads* |
| 7 | GUATEMALA = A in rev. of (A LAME TUG) |
| 9 | AVE MARIA (V, ME) in A ARIA = a song |
| 13 | METHUSELAH = ME,THUS,HALE rev. One of those long-lived OT patriarchs when not a big bottle of bubbly |
| 15 | CLAMOROUS = CL=class,A MO=a short time,ROUS(e)=get excited. My other one filled in without full wordplay understanding, probably from CL+AMOROUS=excited, not worrying about the ‘missing start of exam’. |
| 17 | PINDARIC = P,I,NDARIC=(in card)* |
| 19 | TONNEAU = (one aunt)* – French word for the back of an open car, or a protective cover for the back seats. The trickiest answer word in the puzzle but the anag. and a bit of spelling nous should be enough to get it. |
| 20 | RAT A TAT = (TATA=goodbye=cheers, TAR) rev. – this looked like new wordplay, though I wonder whether an opportunity was missed for “Hello, sailor”? Just the reverse! |
| 22 | EXPAT = (X=ten,P,A=per), in ET = “European tax originally” |
| 23 | CRAFT = RAF in C(ockpi)T |
| 24 | CALM = CAL.=state,M=Maoist leader – Pacific is the def., so California being a Pacific state is just a bonus. |
Some very clever and inventive clueing here. All very good, but Iiked 21, 22 and 27 in particular. The only downside of the complexity was that in many cases (7, 15, 16, 18, 26) I had to work back from the answer to get the wordplay.,
Peter, I’m glad you noted that UPRISER is in Collins – it is not in COED or Chambers, so I had to keep an open mind until I had the checking letters.
At 10 I was glad to remember your advice about _GRAVE nobles (in respect of “palsgravines” in a Mephisto a few weeks back). I first considered words like “marchesas” before going for the 3-letter form of the month.
Thanks to the setter!
And if you’ve ever been stuck behind a road train on a dirt road, you’ll know that they are indeed very long trucks. They used to be banned from metropolitan areas, but now they are allowed to roll right through town.
There are a number of instances where bar crossword solvers will have an advantage, which is why I was surprised that Peter missed “-graves” at 10A. At 22D A=per is from the same stable and at 17D the use of “scribbled” as an anagrind (it means to treat roughly as well as to write illegibly).
In a whole collection of good stuff I particularly liked 12A, the neatness of 14A, and both 7D and 15D. Thanks to the setter.
Tom B.
I agree with Peter that the clue surfaces were very natural and convincing, and the wordplay was varied. Difficult to pick a COD, there were so many to choose from, but 7 and 20d appealed particularly. Pushed to make a choice I’d settle for 20d.
My troubles were all in the NE corner, where I was using ‘coy’, not ‘cagey’ as ‘suspicious’. That leads only to great difficulties.
The other parts were OK, I got ‘counterattacks’ and ‘tonneau’ almost immediately, which was a a big help.
Excellent puzzle though – I agree with all the praise it’s already received, and add my own.
I managed to stop the clock for an interruption and then forget to re-start, so I’ve no idea how long it took me to untangle the metaphorical wires with a pair of rusty tweezers and connect them up in the right order using sellotape instead of solder.
Q-0, E-3, D-7, no COD.
Maybe the Christmas clue brought out the humbug in me.
I had only completed half of the puzzle after 30 minutes and had to resort to Bradfords to get PINDARIC which gave me a couple of extra letters which led to solving ROAD TRAIN and REPUDIATE. The the rest fell steadily thereafter with a completion in just under 65 minutes.
I had the right idea for the form of COTTAGEY but had the wrong kind of ‘suspicious’ for a long time.
There seemed to be a lot of homophones or part homophones – 1a, 21a, 26a.
My favourite clues were 18a and 12a.
I guess I won’t be at Cheltenham in the foreseeable future!
Michael H
Fran L-P
Of course we like to complain; we complain when its easy, and we complain when we find it hard. But it is very, very seldom that a genuine mistake is made. You only have to look at the ST cryptic to see what can happen 😉
If only the website was up to the same standard, mutter, mutter…
Unfortunately I have missed about a week’s worth of puzzles because any ‘backdoor’ URLs i have don’t work any more. Have to nip up to the reference library to photocopy them.